2022
DOI: 10.1177/01492063221079249
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Pay Information Disclosure: Review and Recommendations for Research Spanning the Pay Secrecy–Pay Transparency Continuum

Abstract: The amount and type of pay information made available by organizations to employees and between employees can have important effects on employee attitudes and behaviors as well as organizational performance. Although a large body of research on pay information exists, on topics ranging from pay transparency to pay secrecy, researchers have used inconsistent definitions (pay secrecy, openness, transparency, pay communications) and operationalizations that hinder knowledge development. In this paper, consistent … Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…Earlier we focused on perceived fairness, satisfaction, and turnover (or intentions). Turning to work motivation and performance, Brown et al (2022) find that most studies show a positive relationship with transparency, consistent with Lawler (1967). Belogolovsky and Bamberger (2014), for example, found, using a lab experiment, a positive effect of transparency on performance, via an incentive effect, but also via a sorting effect (consistent with Alterman et al, 2021;Card et al, 2012;SimanTov-Nachlieli & Bamberger, 2021).…”
Section: Pay Transparencymentioning
confidence: 59%
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“…Earlier we focused on perceived fairness, satisfaction, and turnover (or intentions). Turning to work motivation and performance, Brown et al (2022) find that most studies show a positive relationship with transparency, consistent with Lawler (1967). Belogolovsky and Bamberger (2014), for example, found, using a lab experiment, a positive effect of transparency on performance, via an incentive effect, but also via a sorting effect (consistent with Alterman et al, 2021;Card et al, 2012;SimanTov-Nachlieli & Bamberger, 2021).…”
Section: Pay Transparencymentioning
confidence: 59%
“…(2021) results together with those of Card et al (2012) suggest pay transparency effects will be more positive for those with higher relative pay, and lower for those with lower relative pay. Brown et al (2022) reconceptualize pay transparency/secrecy through the lens of information asymmetry among senders (organizations or colleagues) and receivers (employees), and then summarize research on the impact of pay transparency on a variety of outcomes and in different contexts. Earlier we focused on perceived fairness, satisfaction, and turnover (or intentions).…”
Section: Pay Transparencymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For example, New York City recently became the largest U.S. city to require private employers to disclose salary ranges in job ads, the Austrian government’s “transparency act” mandates all employers to state the minimum salaries and overpayment options in job ads, and employees in Germany have the right to request information on the average salaries of coworkers in the same job category. However, recent literature has demonstrated that the consequences/outcomes of pay transparency are complex and not universally positive, and asked for much more research on this topic (Arnold and Fulmer, 2018; Bamberger, 2021; Brown et al, 2022; Card et al, 2012; Lam et al, 2022; Marasi and Bennett, 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%